Posts Tagged ‘for sale’

Blue Salt Pools

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Blue Salt Pools watercolor by Amy Crook

Blue Salt Pools by Amy Crook

I’ve been experimenting more with these salt pieces,using different inks to make the original drawings, more or less salt or water to make the pools, and different patterns and colors of watercolor along with them (and even one with no watercolor at all). This one uses a watered-down midnight blue to go with the lighter blue salt pools, and you can see one where the ink really permeated the salt and gave it almost an electric blue feel. Overall I really like the way this one came out, with the color gathering the darkest where the paint brushed along the outer edges of the salt crystals.

Blue Salt Pools, 7″x5″ salt and watercolor on watercolor paper, $299 framed, with free shipping.

I always feel like the scans, while technically accurate, don’t really capture the sparkly, dynamic, three-dimensional feel of these pieces. The salt grows onto the paper, crystallizing with the color from the ink to create these textured alien landscapes, and no photo or scan can ever quite convey that.

Blue Salt Pools, detail, watercolor by Amy Crook

Blue Salt Pools, detail, by Amy Crook

It will ship tucked safely in its frame, so you don’t have to worry about anything untoward happening to it in transit.

Blue Salt Pools, framed watercolor by Amy Crook

Blue Salt Pools, framed, by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Series and Books
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Tentacle Deeps 13

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Tentacle Deeps 13, watercolor by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 13 by Amy Crook

And so we come to the end of a series! 13 Tentacle Deeps seemed like enough, a good stopping point before I got bored with the idea altogether. I’ve really enjoyed having the structure there to experiment with materials, watercolor and salt, pen and ink, different papers and techniques.

This last installment in the series started with a very dark wash of mixed black and green and a little blue, which settled out at the bottom in an interesting root-like formation when it dried. I chose to grow the tentacles out of the top of the roots rather than cover them up, and then added simple table salt to give a little bit of sparkle and texture to the image. The paper is one of the handmade postcards I bought ages ago, rough and off-white and not really a proper rectangle, which gives the piece a wonderful texture.

Tentacle Deeps 13, 4″x6″ watercolor and salt.

I’ve also made an iPhone wallpaper and computer wallpaper out of this one to celebrate the end of the series. Enjoy!

Tentacle Deeps 13, framed art by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 13, framed, by Amy Crook

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Daily Art, Free Wallpapers, Series and Books, Tentacles
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Radiation Spill

Friday, May 27th, 2011

Radiation Spill by Amy Crook

Radiation Spill by Amy Crook

I couldn’t resist a punny title for this piece, after everything that went into making it. I was working away on doing the darker pen-and-ink shading in the background of the tea circle with a quill dip-pen and bottle of ink when I smacked the bottle and dumped it onto the drawing, the table, and a bit on myself. Fortunately I salvaged all three — the tablecloth kept it off the carpet, my pyjamas are none the worse for being a bit inky, and the piece, as you can see, took on a different quality afterward.

I put some salt crystals in the ink pool just to see what happened, and then once it was all dry I finished with the parallel lines radiating out from the salt-encrusted portions of the tea circle. Then, I got a metallic gold colored pencil to put in radial lines coming out from the lighter pool of tea, half-erasing them to give a subtle, distressed feel. One of the things I really like about the quill-and-ink section is that the metal nib actually scratches into the paper, so you can still see the texture of the lines even in the big pool of ink.

I think the final effect is of something rising up over hills, the sun half-under a cloud perhaps, or some alien moon somewhere.

Radiation Spill, 5″x7″ mixed media on watercolor paper, $129 with free shipping.

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art
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Tender Planet

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

Tender Planet by Amy Crook

Tender Planet by Amy Crook

This piece of art was created with theoretically edible ingredients, except of course for the paper. Of course, the tea had been sitting in a dish on my shelf for two days when I made this, so I’m not sure I’d want to have drunk it at that point, but it’s the thought that counts.

I let the tea puddle and gather on the page, and once it started to dry, I moved the tea-soaked salt crystals off the pool in the middle and onto the white page around it. I added a tiny drop of extra tea to the each salt crystal to make a series of satellites around the central circle. The tea had managed to change from when it was fresh-brewed, and a sediment settled out in the denser parts giving it a rough look like a shadow on the surface of a moon or planet. The crystals were brushed gently off once the piece was completely dry, to leave this final image that suggested its name to me the moment I saw it completed.

I think this is my favorite so far of the tea experiments, actually, I love the organic feel of it, nature creating art with only a little bit of human intervention. The slightly larger page size gives the image room to float in the middle like a planet sending its child satellites out to explore space, but not too far just yet.

Tender Planet, 7″x7″ tea and salt on Arches cover white paper.

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art
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Red Irony

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

Red Irony watercolor by Amy Crook

Red Irony, front cover, by Amy Crook

I have a few of these little folded over pieces of thick, stiff watercolor paper just waiting for me to find something to do with them. This first one had its front painted weeks before the last of its inside panels got their decorations.

When you unfold the first panel of the little square, you get a different Zen circle and surprise tentacles:

Red Irony, watercolor detail, by Amy Crook

Red Irony, detail, by Amy Crook

The inner circle is smaller and a little more broken, and the tentacles seem to be reaching for it, toward some mysterious end.

When you open it further you find that the tentacles are now reaching for a mysterious blue-black circle of paint, accompanied by an appropriate Lovecraft quote.

Red Irony, inside panels, by Amy Crook

Red Irony, inside panels, by Amy Crook

From even the greatest of horrors, irony is seldom absent.
-H.P. Lovecraft

The starting F has been decorated with twining red tentacles, this panel done with pen and ink in matching shades of blue-black and blood red, rather than watercolor like the rest of the piece.

Red Irony, 10″x4.25″ watercolor and pen and ink on watercolor paper.

This piece is unframed, and really is more suited to standing snuggled up with old books where it can surprise the unwary, and hopefully make them smile at its odd message. The paper is quite stiff and the materials archival, so it should be able to withstand a bit of wear and tear, though I’d still keep it out of reach of little fingers.

For completion, here’s what the back of the piece looks like, though I may add a signature to the blank back panel before it gets slipped away into storage with the rest of my watercolor pieces.

Red Irony, outside panels, by Amy Crook

Red Irony, outside panels, by Amy Crook

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Daily Art, Series and Books, Tentacles, Things I'm a Fan Of
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Eye of the Moon

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

Eye of the Moon, watercolor by Amy Crook

Eye of the Moon by Amy Crook

The same day I did the tea washes, I did a few watercolor washes as well, just simple pale circles to do something with later. When I took this one back out the other night, it reminded me of an eye, but also of a pale, cool moon floating in its own gentle glow. The paper around the circle is a bit warped, giving it a touch of subtle halo, which you can just barely see in the image above.

I used the same crosshatch pattern as I did with Blood Moon, only this time I used a deep blue-black rather than the bright red. Instead of adding texture with a contrasting color of ink, I put an abstractly slitted pupil into the center of the white “eye” that gave the whole image an ornate feeling. The high contrast between background and foreground gives this piece much more deliberateness, and this thinner sketchbook paper also held the ink better, with less bleeding.

Eye of the Moon, 7″x5″ watercolor and pen & ink on paper.

I took a progress shot with my iPhone right after I started, so you can see the texture on the wash without the interference of the pattern.

Eye of the Moon, work in progress by Amy Crook

Eye of the Moon, work in progress by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art
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Tentacle Deeps 12

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

Tentacle Deeps 12, watercolor by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 12 by Amy Crook

I think I may be just about done with the tentacle series, so in a few weeks I’ll have to think of something else to do with my Tuesdays.

This one got two layers of washes, one darker than the other, so I decided to keep the tentacles themselves to a single, matte black layer, contained entirely within the darker wash, at least at the bottom. One of them does break out of the top, as tentacles are wont to do. The rich colors of this were lost somewhat in the scanning process (I do seem to say that a lot, don’t I?), but this handmade (not by me, though) postcard looks great in a simple black frame.

Tentacle Deeps 12, 4″x6″ watercolor on handmade postcard.

Tentacle Deeps 12, framed art by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 12, framed, by Amy Crook

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Daily Art, Series and Books, Tentacles
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